London Gatwick reports record passengers in 2014

12 January 2015

Gatwick recorded its busiest ever year in 2014 with 38 million passengers – a 7.6% increase. The growth was driven across a range of markets, underlining Gatwick’s case for expansion as the airport that would benefit the widest range of passengers, travel and airline models.

Long haul traffic played a key role in the growth, including the launch of ground-breaking new low-cost long-haul flights to New York and Los Angeles which helped drive a 2.8% growth in flights to North America.

Traffic to other long haul destinations in 2014 saw an increase of 12.1%. Travel to Dubai alone rose 8.3%, while Gatwick’s links to emerging markets were boosted with new routes such as Garuda Indonesia’s new services to Jakarta and new easyJet routes to Tel Aviv.

Around 1 in 5 passengers now travel through Gatwick on business and the airport now serves 46 of the 50 top business destinations in Europe. Among the fastest growing European destinations from Gatwick in 2014 were the business centres of Copenhagen (up 23.9%) along with Paris and Brussels which were boosted by the launch of new services in 2014.

The record-breaking growth in 2014 was completed by over 2.5 million passengers travelling through the airport in December – an 8% increase on last year. The December figures also mark 22 consecutive months of growth at Gatwick.

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Nick Dunn, Chief Financial Officer at London Gatwick, said: “Gatwick’s record-breaking figures show an airport serving the widest range of travel and airline models - exactly what is needed from the decision about the UK’s next runway.

“Airport expansion should be for the many not the few, and our broad range of growth underlines that Gatwick is the obvious solution if we want all passengers and all types of travel to benefit.

“Expand Heathrow and we take a backwards step towards higher fares, less choice and the monopolies of the past. Only Gatwick can offer the win-win solution of a bigger Gatwick, a better Heathrow and airports throughout the UK benefitting from greater competition.”